Method and device for crosstalk compensation
11817301 · 2023-11-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01J49/0036
ELECTRICITY
H01J49/027
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A signal processing unit comprises: at least one data signal input line adapted to receive a measured data signal generated by an image current, the measured data signal comprising an added crosstalk signal induced by a source of electromagnetic disturbance; at least one disturbance signal input line adapted to receive a decoupled disturbance signal, extracted from the source of electromagnetic disturbance; an output line adapted to supply a compensated data signal; a conditioning module, to which the decoupled disturbance signal is supplied via the disturbance signal input line and which provides a compensation signal; and an adding module, to which the measured data signal and the compensation signal are provided and in which the measured data signal and the compensation signal are superposed, whereby the decoupled disturbance signal is conditioned by the conditioning module such that the compensation signal essentially corresponds to an inverted added crosstalk signal.
Claims
1. A signal processing unit comprising: (a). at least one measured data signal input line adapted to receive a measured data signal generated by an image current, wherein the measured data signal comprises an added crosstalk signal induced by a source of electromagnetic disturbance; (b). at least one disturbance signal input line adapted to receive a decoupled disturbance signal, extracted from the source of electromagnetic disturbance by an extraction device; (c). an output line adapted to supply a compensated data signal to at least one data receiving device; (d). a conditioning module, to which the decoupled disturbance signal is supplied via the disturbance signal input line and which provides a compensation signal; and (e). an adding module, to which the measured data signal and the compensation signal are provided and in which the measured data signal and the compensation signal are superposed, whereby the decoupled disturbance signal is conditioned by the conditioning module in such a way that the compensation signal essentially corresponds to an inverted added crosstalk signal.
2. The signal-processing unit according to claim 1 wherein the data signal input line is connected to a detector unit of a Fourier transform mass spectrometer supplying the measured data signal.
3. The signal-processing unit according to claim 1 wherein the disturbance signal input line is connected to the extraction device extracting the decoupled disturbance signal from the source of electromagnetic disturbance.
4. The signal-processing unit according to claim 3 wherein the extraction device comprises an impedance component.
5. The signal-processing unit according to claim 4 wherein the extraction device comprises an antenna adapted to detect the decoupled disturbance signal.
6. The signal-processing unit according claim 4 wherein the extraction device comprises an additional winding of a transformer.
7. The signal-processing unit according to claim 1, wherein the conditioning module comprises at least a phase shifter, and at least an amplification module.
8. The signal-processing unit according to claim 1, wherein the conditioning module is digitally controlled.
9. The signal-processing unit according to claim 1, wherein the decoupled disturbance signal in a form of analogous signal is conditioned by adjusting the phase and/or the amplitude of the decoupled disturbance signals to obtain the compensation signal.
10. The signal processing unit according to claim 1 wherein the adding module further comprises a junction to which the adding module is adapted to supply both the measured data signal and the compensation signal in order to superpose them.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The drawings, described below, are for illustration purposes only. The drawings are not intended to limit the scope of the present teaching in any way.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(17) In the following, exemplary embodiments of the invention will be described, referring to the figures. These examples are provided to provide further understanding of the invention, without limiting its scope.
(18) In the following description, a series of features and/or steps are described. The skilled person will appreciate that unless required by the context, the order of features and steps is not critical for the resulting configuration and its effect. Further, it will be apparent to the skilled person that irrespective of the order of features and steps, the presence or absence of time delay between steps or simultaneous implementation, can be present in some or all of the described steps.
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(20) The method can be applied to a system comprising a detector unit 200 adapted to output a measured data signal 20, which is preferably by an image current. In particular, the method can be used with systems such as Fourier transform mass spectrometers, like ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometers (ICR mass spectrometers, ICR-MS) and mass spectrometers using ion trapping, like Orbitrap® mass spectrometers offered by Thermo Fisher Scientific (Bremen) GmbH and Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.
(21) In systems comprising such detector units, sources of an electromagnetic disturbance 100 may be present. Such sources of an electromagnetic disturbance 100 can be electronic devices like quadrupole electrode, the RF voltage supply of quadrupole electrodes, vibrations of vacuum pumps and other supplied RF voltages, e.g. of ion optics, AC/DC converter. Such devices emit an electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 (also referred to as an added crosstalk signal 102), for example electromagnetic radiation, which can unintentionally interact with the detector unit 200. Such interaction is generally known as crosstalk of the electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 and the detector unit 200. The crosstalk is modifying the measured data signal 20 in comparison to an undisturbed measured signal (which would be hypothetically measured in the absence of this interaction). It was found that due to the crosstalk of the electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 with a detector unit 200, which is detecting a measured data signal 20 generated by an image current, an added crosstalk signal is superposed to the undisturbed measured signal. For many sources of an electromagnetic disturbance 100, the added crosstalk signal is a periodic signal, which is interfering with the undisturbed measured signal. In particular, due to such added cross talk signals, the following effects can occur in the measured data signal 20: additional harmonics, phase shifts, destructive interference, beats, and standing waves. The present method describes a way to compensate such undesirable added crosstalk signals in order to obtain a compensated data signal 22. The method can, for example, be used in the field of Fourier transform mass spectroscopy with the detector unit 200 being a part of the mass spectrometer. As a concrete example, the method can be used with an Orbitrap® mass analyser in order to filter out undesirable added crosstalk signals. Such added crosstalk signals can originate, for example, from quadrupole electrodes, generators supplying the RF voltage to quadrupole electrodes (such as electrodes of quadrupole mass filters) or from components of the detector unit 200 and/or electronics in the surrounding of the detector unit 200.
(22) The method can comprise step S1 of extracting a decoupled disturbance signal 10. The decoupled disturbance signal 10 can originate from any source of electromagnetic disturbance 100, and can be extracted by an extraction device 103. The electromagnetic disturbance originated from such a source of electromagnetic disturbance can interact with the detector unit 200 by crosstalk. Due to this, an added crosstalk signal is added by superposition to an undisturbed measured data signal, which would be detected by the detector unit 200, if the source of disturbance 100 would be absent or not active. The interaction is resulting in the measured data signal 20 comprising the added crosstalk signal. Therefore, the crosstalk between the electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 emitted by the source of electromagnetic disturbance 100 and the detector unit 200 is influencing the measured data signal 20.
(23) The effect of crosstalk can be eliminated by using the decoupled disturbance signal to adjust the measured data signal 20 in order to obtain a compensated data signal 22. The effect of crosstalk is then eliminated, when the influence of an added crosstalk signal on the compensated data signal 22 is so small, that it is irrelevant when supplied to a data-receiving device. This means that the remaining influence of an added crosstalk signal on the compensated data signal 22 is so small, that for information derived from the compensated signal supplied to the data receiving device, no other result was derived, then the one that would be derived from an undisturbed measured data signal. In other words, the added crosstalk signal is eliminated when information derived from the compensated signal 22 is not influenced by the presence of the source of an electromagnetic disturbance 100 and the associated crosstalk. For example, in a Fourier transform mass spectrometer, any identified mass peak caused by a source of an electromagnetic disturbance 100 and not by detected ions is eliminated. There might be specific criteria, which can be used to define when a mass peak is identified. Examples of such criteria are already described before. For example, the remaining influence of an added crosstalk signal might be small enough, if its amplitude is significantly reduced. The amplitude may be reduced so much, that it is below five times of the medium amplitude of a measured noise signal, preferably below three times of the medium amplitude of a measured noise signal and in particular below two times of the medium amplitude of a measured noise signal. On the other hand, the remaining influence of an added crosstalk signal might be small enough, if the phase shift between the added crosstalk signal and the compensation signal 16 deviates only very little from 180°, when both signals are supplied to the same junction in an adding module 220. Typically, the value of the deviation from 180° is below 2°, preferably below 1° and more preferably below 0.5°. The extracting of the decoupled disturbance signal 10 can be achieved by extraction device 103, which is adapted to receive the decoupled disturbance signal 10 from the source of electromagnetic disturbance 100. The added crosstalk signal 102 (also referred to as an electromagnetic disturbance signal 102) of a source of electromagnetic disturbance 100 and its corresponding decoupled disturbance signal 10 comprise at least nearly exactly the same shape, but might have a different amplitude and/or might be phase shifted with respect to each other. Usually, the added crosstalk signal 102 of a source of electromagnetic disturbance 100 and its corresponding decoupled disturbance signal 10 are periodic functions. Then they have the same period T, frequency f and angular frequency ω. Obtaining the compensated data signal 22 therefore can require adjusting the decoupled disturbance signal 10 by conditioning before using it to adjust the measured data signal 20.
(24) Therefore, in step S2, the decoupled disturbance signal 10 can be conditioned to obtain an appropriate compensation signal 16. This is done by applying a phase shift and/or amplitude amplification to the decoupled disturbance signal 10 to match or approach the amplitude and/or phase of the inverted added crosstalk signal 102 of the measured data signal 20. This is explained in more detail with reference to
(25) In step S3, the measured data signal 20 and the compensation signal 16 are provided to an adding module 220. In the adding module 220, both signals, are superposed, e.g. by supplying to one junction. By superposition of both signals, a compensated data signal 22 is generated, which can be supplied to a data-receiving device. In this way, a compensated data signal 22 can be obtained.
(26) The conditioning module has to condition the decoupled disturbance signal 10 to obtain an appropriate compensation signal 16 in such a way that, when the measured data signal 20 and compensation signal 16 are superposed, the compensation signal 16 corresponds to an essentially inverted signal of the added crosstalk signal. This condition is satisfied when the amplitudes and phase shift of both signals only deviate so much, that the added crosstalk signal does not have a relevant influence on the compensated data signal 22 when it is supplied to a data-receiving device. Details about the acceptable amplitude deviation and phase deviation are described before.
(27) Preferably, the conditioning module has to condition the decoupled disturbance signal 10 to obtain an appropriate compensation signal 16 in such a way that, when the measured data signal 20 and compensation signal 16 are superposed, the compensation signal 16 corresponds to the inverted added crosstalk signal.
(28) The method can be performed continuously while the detector unit 200 generates the measured data signal 20. The electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 emitted by a source of an electromagnetic disturbance 100 may depend on time, the temperature and other parameters like a frequency of the source of an electromagnetic disturbance 100. The inventive method works independently of the temperature and other parameters like a frequency of the source of an electromagnetic disturbance 100 or time, and is therefore a very robust method. This is due to the effects of various parameter changes affecting the added crosstalk signal and the decoupled disturbance signal in the same way. In this way, the measured data signal 20 can be adjusted in real time or almost in real time to obtain the compensated data signal 22.
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(30) The signal-processing unit 1 can comprise signal processing electronics 6, data signal input line 2, disturbance signal input line 3, and output line 4. The data signal input line 2 can be adapted to connect the device 1 to a detector unit 200 (not shown here) such as a Fourier transform mass analyser, said detector unit 200 producing a measured data signal 20. The disturbance signal input line 3 can be adapted to receive input from an extraction device (not shown here) that can respectively extract it from a source of electromagnetic disturbance 100. Such input is in the form of decoupled disturbance signal 10.
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(32) An extraction device 103 is configured to extract a decoupled disturbance signal 10 from the source of electromagnetic disturbance 102. This decoupled disturbance signal 10 comprises the same general shape and angular frequency as the added crosstalk signal 102, but may comprise a different amplitude and/or phase. The decoupled disturbance signal 10 is then input to a conditioning module 115, which is configured to adjust it to obtain a compensation signal 16. The compensation signal 16 is an input to an adding module 220, where the measured data signal 20 is also an input. The two signals are superposed, e.g. at one junction. The compensation signal 16 is conditioned in such a way, that it is an essentially inverted signal of the added crosstalk signal 102. Therefore, when the measured data signal 20 and the compensation signal 16 are superposed, the added crosstalk signal 102 is at least so far cancelled, that for information derived from the compensated signal 22 supplied to a data receiving device, no other result was derived, than the one that would be derived from an undisturbed measured data signal.
(33) The compensated data signal 22 is then sent to a control unit 240. The control unit 240 is configured to receive the compensated data signal 22. In the case of Fourier transform mass spectrometry, the control unit 240 is further configured to display the mass spectrum after the applied Fourier transform. It can be further configured to control the conditioning module 115. Furthermore, the control unit 240 can control the calibration of the control parameters of the conditioning module. The control unit 240 can further trigger the calibration of the control parameters.
(34) The signal-processing unit 1 consists of the adding module 220 and the conditioning module 115.
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(36) A decoupled disturbance signal 10 can be obtained from a source of electromagnetic disturbance 100 by an extraction device 103. Possible ways of obtaining the decoupled disturbance signal 10 are discussed in relation to
(37) The modified decoupled disturbance signal 14 can then be guided to an amplifier 160. The amplifier 160 can be adapted to adjust the amplitude of the modified decoupled disturbance signal 14 to make it equal to the amplitude of added crosstalk signal incorporated into the measured data signal 20. This amplitude can be estimated, for example, based on the expected peak shape of the measured data signal 20 versus the obtained shape. Additionally or alternatively, the amplitude of the added crosstalk signal can be estimated based on calibration procedures performed without a sample. That is, a data acquisition session on a Fourier transform mass spectrometer can be run without an active sample the composition of which is to be determined. In this way, the obtained signal would comprise no data, but rather only the added crosstalk signal, which can then be measured and compensated for. The amplitude of the modified decoupled disturbance signal 14 can be changed in one or more steps or by iteratively observing the measured data signal 20 or signals derived from it. In particular, when a Fourier transform is applied to the measured data signal, the amplitude of peaks in a mass spectrum that are induced by the electromagnetic disturbance 102 can be observed. The amplifier 160 can then output a compensation signal 16. The amplifier 160 can be digitally controlled.
(38) The phase shifter 170 comprising the inverter 120 and the phase shifters 140, 142, as well as the amplifier 160 are arranged in the conditioning module 115.
(39) The compensation signal 16 can then be guided to an adding module 220. The adding module 220 can be adapted to superpose the compensation signal 16 to the measured data signal 20, which might be pre-amplified in order to subtract the added crosstalk signal from the measured data signal 20. The adding module 220 can output a compensated data signal 22.
(40) The measured data signal 20 can have been pre-amplified by means of a pre-amplifier 150. The amplifier 150 can be adapted to be switched on or off in order to observe the measured data signal 20. It can be used when otherwise the measured data signal 20 would be low or when a user deems it convenient and/or necessary.
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(42) As described in relation to
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(44) The extraction module 103 is described in detail with reference to
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(47) In the used embodiment described in
(48) A second digital signal switch is provided (signal 0/1) to switch off both operational amplifiers 312 and 314 for deactivating the whole conditioning module (“signal 1”).
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(50) Capacitors 404 on the positive input pin of the operational amplifier are selected so that the first shifter 140 can perform a rough shift of 0° . . . 160° in 128 steps (digital 7-bit access), while the second phase shifter 142 can perform a finer resolved shift of 0° . . . 40° in the same number of steps.
(51) At first, the AC signal of the intermediate signal 12 is filtered by only a capacitor 400. The capacitor 400 is necessary when the intermediate signal is on a basic (DC) level, different from the ground level. Such constant signal might be superposed to the decoupled disturbance signal 10 having no influence on the eliminating of the added crosstalk signal.
(52) The phase shift is defined by RC-element 402 with a capacitor 404 and a resistor 406 on the positive input of operational amplifier 408. The resistive part of the RC-element 402 is a digitally controlled resistor 406 (7 bit access), a potentiometer, so that the phase shift can be controlled digitally. Due to the topology of this shifter, the phase shift also affects the amplitude of the signal, which must be accounted for by the next stage 160 shown in
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(54) The amplification is performed by a multiplying digital to analog converter 500, where the reference input is the modified decoupled disturbance signal 14.
(55) Upstream of the digital to analog converter (DAC) 500, a capacitor is provided to filter only the AC signal of the modified decoupled disturbance signal 14 filtering the medium level of the signal of 2.5 V.
(56) Different multiplying DACs with different resolution (8 . . . 24 bit access 504) are available. Via this access 504, the amplification provided by digital to analog converter 500 can be controlled. The output signal of the digital to analog converter 500 is then provided to an operational controller 506. The signals accordingly originating from phase shifters and the amplifier device are shown in
(57) The amplification accounts for the amplitude differences due to different ways of obtaining the added crosstalk signal and the compensation signal as well as for the amplitude loss in the phase shifter stages.
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(59) If several crosstalk signals are being compensated, they can be added in the same way. The shown topology accounts for four compensation signals 161, 162, 163 and 164 of four different sources of an electromagnetic disturbance, which are at first added up and then provided as one signal to junction 600, to which also the measured data signal 20 is supplied. From the junction 600, the compensated signal 22 is provided to a data-receiving device. In this way, the added crosstalk signals of all four different sources of an electromagnetic disturbance are eliminated.
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(63) Independently of the configuration or of the schematic position of the extraction device 103, the decoupled disturbance signal 10 follows electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 in form, frequency, and amplitude. Both signals have the same form and frequency. Any change of the form and frequency of the electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 results in the same change of the form and frequency of the decoupled disturbance signal 10. Any relative change of the amplitude of the electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 will result in the same relative change of the amplitude of the decoupled disturbance signal 10. This means that if the amplitude of the electromagnetic disturbance signal 102 changes by an amplification factor Af, wherein Af is the ratio of the amplitude after the change to the amplitude before the change, the amplitude of the decoupled disturbance signal 10 changes also by same amplification factor Af.
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(71) The exemplarily described here conditioning module 115 comprises the inverter 120, the phase shifters 140 and 142 and the amplitude amplifier 160. These components are digitally controlled and are preferably calibrated at least once for a given disturbance source. These parameters build a four-dimensional search space with for example 2×128×128×1024 variations. A brute force procedure would need too much time to determine an optimal parameter set. The following describes an exemplary schematic calibration procedure that can be used for the determination of the parameter set to eliminate the added crosstalk signal induced by an electromagnetic disturbance 102 of a specific source of an electromagnetic disturbance 100.
(72) The calibration procedure can be applied to a Fourier transform mass spectrometer, e.g. with an Orbitrap® mass analyser.
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(74) Step 1. Rough matching of the amplitudes. a. Switch off the crosstalk compensation path and identify the frequency of the investigated electromagnetic disturbance 102 (see
(75) In a second step, a sweep through the settings of the phase shifter is made to investigate how the amplitude of the compensation signal 16 is influenced by the phase setting. Only the crosstalk compensation is switched on to condition the decoupled disturbance signal 10 extracted from the source of the electromagnetic disturbance 100. The detector unit 200 is switched off, and no measured data signal 20 is supplied to the adding module 200. First, for this measurement, the amplitude of the compensation signal 16 is set to a high value by a high value amplification by the amplitude amplifier 160. Then, the first phase shifter 140 is set from 0 to 127 consecutively two times, one time without a 180° phase shift by the inverter 120 (“signal 0”) and one time without a 180° phase shift by the inverter 120 (“signal 1”). The change of the amplitude of compensation signal 16, which is the compensated signal 22 due to the switched off detector unit 200, is stored for each setting of the phase shifter. The same sweep is also made for the second phase shifter 142 and, accordingly, the change of the amplitude of compensation signal 16 is stored for each setting of the phase shifter. Based on this change of the amplitude, the amplification setting of the amplifier 160 is adjusted according to the used setting of the phase shifters to compensate the change of the amplitude of the compensation signal 16 with the setting of the phase shifters in the following steps of the calibration.
(76) A step-by-step overview of this procedure also follows.
(77) Step 2. Account for amplitude influence of the phase shifters e. Set amplitude of the compensation signal 16 to a high value f. Set the setting of the first phase shifter 140 from 0 to 127 consecutively and store the change in the amplitude g. Same as f. for phase shifter 142. From this point on, for each setting of phase shifters, the amplitude setting of the amplitude amplifier 160 is adjusted according to the factors measured in f. and g.
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(79) The inverter 120 is then set to 0°. Then the coarse phase shifter 140 is iterated from 0 to 127. Then, the inverter 120 is set to 180°, and the procedure is repeated.
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(82) Step 3. Determine best setting for phase shifters h. Switch on the signal data path again, and set the amplitude of the compensation signal 16 to the value determined in d. i. Set inverter 120 to 0° and iterate both phase shifters 140 and 142 from 0 to 127 simultaneously. Find the minimum for the disturbing signal in spectrum. j. Same as in i., but with the inverter set to 180°. k. Set the inverter and the shifters to the values where the minimum was found. l. Vary in a range of a few steps both shifters 140 and 142 separately and find the minimum. For example, if the minimum was found at the setting 32, look in the range [16 . . . 48]×[16 . . . 48] for phase shifters 140 and 142 accordingly.
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(84) Step 4. Fine matching of the amplitudes. m. Repeat d. with the best-found setting for the shifters.
(85) In Table 1 below, some of the terms used in the present document are explained, defined and/or exemplified. The given definitions and examples are not exclusive and are given merely for the user's convenience and understanding.
(86) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Definitions of Terms and Components Source of an e.g. RF power supply of a quadrupole filter, the electromagnetic electrodes of a quadrupole, which is emitting an disturbance 100 electromagnetic disturbance 102. Electromagnetic Emitted signal of a source of electromagnetic disturbance 102 disturbance 100 influencing the measured data signal 20 of a detector unit 200, in particular of a Fourier transform mass spectrometer. Detector unit Unit, in particular of a Fourier transform mass 200 spectrometer, measuring a data signal, generated by an image current, in particular induced by ions in a mass analyser, whereby the unit may comprise further components like a preamplifier to change the image current into a measured data signal. Measured data Signal measured by the detector unit 200 provided by in signal 20 interface to the periphery. Undisturbed Signal measured by the detector unit 200 provided by measured data an interface to the periphery, when no source of an signal 18 electromagnetic disturbance is influencing the measured data signal 20. Crosstalk Interaction, in particular interference, between an electromagnetic disturbance and a detector unit modifying the measured data signal in comparison to the undisturbed measured data signal. In particular, it can be a superposition of at least a part of the electromagnetic disturbance with the undisturbed measured data signal. Added crosstalk Signal added to the undisturbed measured data signal signal by the crosstalk of an electromagnetic disturbance and the detector unit resulting in the measured data signal. undisturbed data measured data + added crosstalk signal = measured data signal Extraction Device which extracts a signal from a source of an device 103 electromagnetic disturbance, the decoupled disturbance signal 10, which is correlated to the electromagnetic disturbance having the same shape and frequency and being correlated to the amplitude of the electromagnetic disturbance. Decoupled Signal extracted by an extraction device 103 from a disturbance source of an electromagnetic disturbance which is signal 10 correlated to the electromagnetic disturbance 102 having the same shape and frequency and being correlated to the amplitude of the electromagnetic disturbance. Conditioning Module, to which a decoupled disturbance signal 10 is module 115 provided. The conditioning module 115 is conditioning the decoupled disturbance signal 10 to obtain the compensation signal 16 by applying only a phase shift and/or an amplitude amplification to the decoupled disturbance signal 10. Preferably, the condition module comprises both components: phase shifter 170 and amplification module 160. Phase shifter The phase shifter has two functions. It inverts the 170 decoupled disturbance signal 10 and compensates any phase difference Δφ, which the compensation signal 16 and the measured data signal 20 would have at the adding module 220, which is different from 180°, by an additional phase shift −Δφ. In general, an essential phase inversion of the compensation signal is sufficient to eliminate the added crosstalk signals according to the invention. φ.sub.ms phase angle of the measured data signal 20 at the adding module 220 φ.sub.cs phase angle of the compensation signal 16 superposed to the measured data signal 20 at the adding module 220 φ.sub.cs − φ.sub.ms = 180° φ.sub.inv phase angle of the compensation signal 16 at the adding module 220 without additional phase shift, if only a phase shift of 180° is applied to the decoupled disturbance signal 10 φ.sub.inv − φ.sub.ms = 180° + Δφ Amplification The amplifier 160 modifies the amplitude of the module 160 decoupled disturbance signal as part of the conditioning module 115, so that the amplitude of the decouple disturbance signal matches the amplitude of the compensation signal 16. Compensation The compensation signal 16 is provided by the signal 16 conditioning module 115 when a decoupled disturbance signal 10 is provided to the conditioning module 115. Adding module The measured data signal 20 and the compensation 220 signal 16 are provided to the adding module 220, preferably at one junction 600. Both signals are superposed to obtain the compensated data signal 22 by the adding module, which is essentially the same signal, which would be provided by the detector unit 200 without any interference from the source of electromagnetic disturbance 100. Compensated The compensated signal 22 is provided by the adding signal 22 module 220 and is essentially the same signal, which would be provided by the detector unit 200 without any source of electromagnetic disturbance 100.
(87) As used herein, including in the claims, singular forms of terms are to be construed as also including the plural form and vice versa, unless the context indicates otherwise. Thus, it should be noted that as used herein, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
(88) Throughout the description and claims, the terms “comprise”, “including”, “having”, and “contain” and their variations should be understood as meaning “including but not limited to”, and are not intended to exclude other components if not in detail stated in the description.
(89) The term “at least one” should be understood as meaning “one or more”, and therefore includes both embodiments that include one or multiple components. Furthermore, dependent claims that refer to independent claims that describe features with “at least one” have the same meaning, both when the feature is referred to as “the” and “the at least one”.
(90) It will be appreciated that variations to the foregoing embodiments of the invention can be made while still falling within the scope of the invention can be made while still falling within scope of the invention. Features disclosed in the specification, unless stated otherwise, can be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent or similar purpose. Thus, unless stated otherwise, each feature disclosed represents one example of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.
(91) Use of exemplary language, such as “for instance”, “such as”, “for example” and the like, is merely intended to better illustrate the invention and does not indicate a limitation on the scope of the invention unless so claimed. Any steps described in the specification may be performed in any order or simultaneously, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(92) All of the features and/or steps disclosed in the specification can be combined in any combination, except for combinations where at least some of the features and/or steps are mutually exclusive. In particular, preferred features of the invention are applicable to all aspects of the invention and may be used in any combination.